
President Donald Trump made an appearance at the Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit on Tuesday and announced that companies including Google, Blackstone and FirstEnergy plan to make $92 billion in energy and AI investments in the state.
Blackstone will be building and operating “new natural gas-based, combined-cycle generation stations” in a joint venture with PPL Corp “to power data centers under long-term energy services agreements with regulated-like risk profiles that do not expose the companies to merchant energy and capacity price volatility,” said Edison Electric Institute in a release.
FirstEnergy Chair, President and CEO Brian Tierney announced at the summit that his utility plans to invest more than $28 billion “systemwide to modernize local distribution systems and strengthen the transmission network. In Pennsylvania, that includes spending $15 billion in the infrastructure enhancements, people, processes, and facilities needed to deliver safe, reliable power.”
Thar Casey, CEO of AmberSemi, a developer of power management technologies, including a power conversion solution for AI data centers, attended the summit and said his “first impression from talking to Pennsylvanians is that they’re excited about getting that kind of attention.”
“It’s fantastic for the state; it tells me that [Sen. Dave McCormick, R-Pa.] is doing his job,” Casey said. However, he added, he doesn’t only see the announcements as a plus for Pennsylvania, but the U.S. in general.
“I had a chance to talk to some very key influential people and speak with them about the efficiency aspect of things, in addition to the focus that they have on power,” he said. “You see it in their eyes when you bring up efficiency — it’s a subject that they’re focused on.”
Trump’s announcement was criticized by environmental groups like Evergreen Action, which issued a release saying the president had “unveiled a plan to double down on expensive fossil fuels” after “kneecapping clean energy” with recent cuts to the Inflation Reduction Act.
“Slashing clean energy programs while supercharging demand with new data centers will drive up costs and worsen grid stability in a region already grappling with mounting price hikes,” said the group’s Deputy State Policy Director Julia Kortrey.